Newspapers / The Weekly Raleigh Register … / April 4, 1855, edition 1 / Page 1
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.-, -i--'- T I r-iTiir-nnri- ri i ii I,; i f i i rii - i it , t -i ir mriiin '," hiil 'j' ' mi pin BflljBt. ilit 'lii'Wli I ' n ' ' i' r ' 1 i n . il.'n' 11 y fi "" 1 i I . .'. " '.I T,l " Jj ' n T r hit T it tttt nrTi i inn t in a II mini i ifi ' inn la ' m volume lvi . . ,,sv,' .;wV:,.; ' OTjomiia-wBpaiiHj -lis.s.i gs.oms: TBK RALEIGH REGISTER. PUBLISHED BY SEATON GALES, 'ED1TORANDPROPRIKTOR, AT $2 50 IN AP VANCE ; OR, $3 00, AT THE END OF THE YEAR. (t-gjL9tnouq jtj mi of fpj. fipLvdRq p9duzmitQ R A L E I (i II, K. C. SATURDAY MORN1NQ, MAR. 31, 1855. Mr. HENRY M. LEWIS, Montgomery, AUIama. U oar Genera! TrAreling Agent for the Suti of AlabAmA and Tenne9e, assisted by C. F. LEWIS, JAS. O LEWIS and SAMUEL D. LEWIS. Mr. V. W. J AMES, No. 1 Harrison Street, Ciucirnati, Ohio, ia ear Oenrml CoUectiug Agent for the Western SUtes and Texas, assisted by H. J. THOMAS, 3 W. BAM3AY, WILLIAM H THOMAS, TH03 M. JAMES, C. M. L. WISE MAN. A. L. CHILDS, &ad Dr. WILLIAM IRWIN. Receipts of either will be good. Mr. 13RAEL E. JAMES, No. 182 3outh Tenth Street, Philadelphia, is our General Traveling Agent, assisted by WM. H WELD, JNO. COL LINS, JAMES DEE RING, J. HAMMITT, R. 8. JAMES, THOS. D. NICE, R. W. MORRISON, E. W. WILEY, WM- L. WATERMAN, ALEX. Ii. C ARSON, E. MUSTIN, BEN. P. SWAIN, T. ASHMAN, and P. DAVIS. THE DEMOCRACY OF THE NORTH. Those who read onlj oni side "of politios, in bitter partisan pricta, may not know how much !razen indiffereoce to the "truth, the whole truth," is necessary to make an unflinching, thorough-paced, never-mydie, party hack-editor. Who, for example, that reads nothing but the Washington Union, or the " Raleigh Stand ard." would suppose that any Northern demo crats could, or had ever, become Abolitionists ? Now, the truth u, and every intelligent dem ocrat in the South knows it, as well a .we do, that the worst and most dangerous abolition ists, in times past, have been democrats, and, at present, nearly all the leaders of the democ bw great alarm. ; my did he not paVWW( THE ATJY lTStSSSl-)SlpapSS speech before the adjournment ot - the JUegiaiatln fhuadelphia Nerth American, AO bk ture? I see Rayner has written a letter puh Whig journal, vbicb has bmtofereiibtd 13ttle hshed in the Standard, in which he say s the 1 omothing to ay in Telationvto tnU subject. abusive epithet in Brogden's ptinted incjojti I aiijtoijbjitn Jeeo 'ifathet 'iSpdM' Wfi; nom uumreu 17 aim in tae isenace. ueniigut 1 siii uuiaur;juij, is op 1Q WS lasi isu have been otherwise employed ; for he might have known that no sensible mas wonld believe such a speech was ever delivered by Brogden, or that the Senate would have allowed such a tissue of vulgarity .from one of its member to. another r 4 After all the speculations which our ex changes bring as, as to the rightful successor of the late Emperor Nicholas, we imagine there is no real difficulty in the matter. The suggestion is, that as the Archduke Alexander was born before his father's accession to the throne; he is net entitled to succeed, but that right belongs to his brother Constantine, born whilst his fa ther was Emperor, or, as it is expressed, " born under the purple." This notion seems to us a mrs absurdity, for which, so far as we know, there is no support in the laws, customs, or his tory of aay country. , According to this notion, George the third ought not to have succeeded George the second, because his father was only Prince of Wales at his birth, and died wUhout teer having ascended the throne. The same no tion would have postponed the claims of the present Queen of England, and, so far as we are able to see, would have excluded Lewis the fourteenth, who was the grandson of Lewis the fifteenth, and Lewis the sixteenth, who was the grandson of Lewis the fifteenth. It is clear this notion has no foundation in any thing to be found in any other country of Europe besides Russia. Has it any foundation there I We apprehend not In December, 1125, the late Emperor A icholas issued a man ifesto, announcing his accession to the throne. In this instrument, after setting out the abdica tion of the Archduke Constantine, his elder bro ther, and the other matters necessary to perfeet his title, he says : " We now asoend the throne , of our ancestors, the throne of the empire of all the Russias, as well as the thrones inseparable thorefrom that of the kingdom of Poland and the grand duchy of Finland and command first: That the oath of allegiance be rendered to us and to the heir of our throne, the grand duke Alexander, imperial highnens, our much be kved ton."9 (See Niles' Register for 1826, page 427.) - Now, we presume the Emperor Nicholas un derstood quite as much about the law of suc cession to the throne-of Russia as any of our Editors, and therefore it 19 fair to say that, jn 1325, Alexander was the heir to bis father's throne. The oath of allegiance was taken to ' him as suchnot constitutionally not in the event that no son should le born " under the purple" not as only presumptively entitled and liable to be displaced by after events, but absolutely as the heir of the throne, entitled to succeed as heir upon his father's death. So Iear is this, that if his father was Emperor, he was the heir of the empire, for the same oath peror tendered it to Alexander as his beir and successor, and if this does not prove the latter . to have been the heir, then it does not prove the former to have been Emperor. P. S. Since the foregoing was in type, the. intelligence brought by the A tl in tic has come to-hand, for which see another column. Com limentart. Washington Correspon dents occasionally tell some very plain gossip. ( NY e have for some time been trying to find out iu what respect Mr. Pierce bad most distinguish ed his administration, and a Washington Cor respondent, giving an account of what trans pired at dinner table ia Washington, a short time since, explains the whole matter. He VnnV Bt tha Itfnulli DAA n. , V. tn tiA -t ... . . f auouuonists,- Dy sections," " horse, toot ana dragoons." With those who read both side's, or who read neutral papers, the assertion, thai Mie democracy of the North are more abolitiom'zed than the Whig party of that section, needs no proof ; Tnt to those who confine themselves to partisan journals solely, we offer the following list of out-and out abolitionist, who are also leaders of the democracy : Sumner, Butler and others, of Massachusetts ; John P. lisle and Franklin Pierce, of New Hampshire ; 31. Van Buren, J. Van Buren, Dix, King, Cambreleng, Fowler, Cochrau, Rcdfield, Seymour, and many others too numerous to mention of New York.; David Wilmot and others, of Pennsylvania ; Salmon P. Chase.and others, of Ohio; John Went worth, Lyman Trumbull, aud others, of Illinois ; and the new ly elected Governor, and others, of Indiana. In tho new States of Iowa, Wisconsin and California, there is hardly a democrat leader or subordinate who is not at least a free-eoiler ; most of them are flat-footed abolitionists. Even in tiie Southern State of Missouri, we have the great democratic leader, Thomas H. Benton, who is also an avowed free soiler. A.Wa merely record in this connection, as an item of news, the fact, that a bill was lately passed, by the democratic Legislature . of- the State of Michigan, refusing the use of the jails of that State for the detention of fugitive slaves t In short, take out Dickinson, of New York, and, with some qualifications, one or two more, and the whole democracy of the North are hope lessly abolitionized. The Whig party of the North, of the rank and file, may be nearly as bad, but when National Whigs can point to such names among the living as those of Millard Fillmore, Edward Everett, and Rufus Choate, and, among the mighty dead, to that of Daniel Wkbstxr, who gave the monster, Abolition, the deadliest blows that ever fell upon his dra gon carcass, they may well claim, that their -kirts are clearer of abolition and freer . from treason, than those of the pteudo " natural al lies of the South !" VIRGINIA GUBERNATORIAL CONTEST ACCEPTANCE OF MR. FLOURNOY, The Hon. Thomas S. Flournoy has accepted' the nomination of the American party of Yir ginia, as their candidate for the office of Gov ernor of the State. He commences by stating that although h did not expect oc desire, the nomination, preferring t remaiii in private life, still his "entire confidence in, and earnest desire for the success of, the principles of tbe party, upon which, in his bumble judgment, depend the protection of the rights of theStates, and the preservation of the Union,' induce him to accept the nomination." He concludes bis letter of acceptance as fol lows. : . . " In. doing so, it is proper that I should ex press my opinions upon-the subjects which most interest the people of the State. . "I am in favor of a general system of popu-' lar education. "I am in favor of completing the leading lines of internal improvement, now under-prosecution, with as much despatch as the financial condition .of the "State will justify, keeping al ways iu view the preservation of her faith and credit. . .'"..j I endorse fully the Basis . of Principles of the American narty, believing them, to be the most conservative presented to the considera tion of the country since .the establishment of our independence. , " The rapid increase of. foreign immigration is well calculated to excite alarm,, and the power of the Government, both State and Fed eral, should be exerted to check it., It seems almost impossible to doubt that the iufluxof between four and five hundred thousand For eigners into our country annually -will, ulti mately, be subversive of our Republican insti tions. Washington, Jefferson,. Madison, and Jackson gave early warning to the country of the danger to be apprehended from. foreign in fluence. The naturalization laws should either be repealed or so modified and such restric tions imposed as to avert the evil. " It may be said that there are comparative ly but few Foreigners and Roman Catholics in Virginia, She is not acting for herself alone. She is a leading member of this great sister hood of States, and her actions will be ' felt for weal or woe, by them all. Her destiny is iden tified with theirs, and she eannot look with in difference to the fact, that the great valley of the Ausaisstppt, watered, by twenty thousand miles of navigable rivers, and the immense and THE nON. KENNETn RAYNKR. The following extract from a letter, received from one who was in Raleigh, as a visitor, and in the Senate chamber, when Mr. Curtis n. Brogden, of Wayne, delivered that speech, which so completely annihilated Mr.- Rayner, shows the light in which the speech, as published in the " Standard" of March 3rd, struck a disintsres tod spectator, who heard what Brogden did say on that occasion i " By the way, I think the best joke of the season is the speeoh, as. published in the Stand ard, of Curqs II. Brogden, id' which be is- made to destroy Rayner. It certainly is the coolest piece nf impudence I have ever. heard of. . It is the most forcible illustration of the moral con tained in the fable of the Jack-daw and the Peacock. I happened to be in Raleigh and in and examines it impartially rod' philosophical ly in the following paragraph, and comes to the conclusion, that the nevr (arty, like Aaron's rod, is destined t swallow appall others : The elemisnr of secrtcy lis,' no d6ubt been a main instrnmenr in bui Wlng'np to its present formidable proyortions and strength the new American part yv and it mSV well be doubted 1 whether it fcoofd wei ave attained ' uch a height power In any Mhtfr 'wayi-UNatlve A mcrican Organizations are1 aot'nei ainig Us, Vit have maintained a preoartohs existent for years. So also third part lei, based on" th pop ular discontent with the rid pkrties, h vain ly struggled r pertrmbent vitality,""! ri pite f vi vvu prMtcipuw, aua ererytning eise, mese efforts hate proved unavtiflingi the party "drill and attachment to the old orgAnitationi being froof against them. : Suddenly, hew6vet, the brtresses whicli could not be taken by external assault have been captured by the Springing of a mine.- v"': ' ; 0 -': It ia ttc likely that the hew party Hvtll much longer deem secrecy neceta&ry to the success of its operations.' The object of that secrecy, which we presume was- designed to overcome the reyiogtmnce of men ta'leave their old party associations, ha teen aecotnplished, and the new chaHengce' opposition ' as one of the most formidable political 'bodies the country has ever witnessed.' We speak, of course, without reference to its principles, which may or may not be" gobci; as the end shall prove. For the last quarter of a oentury there has existed in this country A party which h4s generally been in theascendantr whose .discipline' was so ef fective, add whose success so uniform, that the whole of those opposed to it, embraefng ths most gifted st&tesmen the nation has produe'ed, were vlrtoMIf FoscribeJi and ' exiudeoT from adminigtrafivl' offices, hot because, 'tu'ey were not eminently Worthy of them, but simply and solely because they did: nor belong to the dom inant ft ction. ' To break down suoh a Combina tion as this, fraught as it lias been with ma h'gn'inflaenc upon our annals, is a' great' a chievetaiebt, and that machinery which sucoess fulry'britigs alKjOtVucfi a resuU cafinot fail to elicit the approbation of a majority of the pub lic.. It'wonWbe difficult for t$e new pirtylo do any mischiefs worse than'some of those per petrated by . the so called Democrats. Our peo ple are too enlightened, toothoroughly republi can, too much accustomed to wield the scep tre of sovereignty, to run into 'extremes of po litical phrensy, and do misdeeds likely to cause subsequent regret' " ' ' '.''" The Whig party, eminently patriotic as it has always been, and boasting'for its leaders the greatest and best men of their day and gen eratioti, has vaidly struggled to make neadway against the party which bore the name of Dem ocratic. ' Though occasionally successful, its victories have neverbeen permanent, and the deserters from the Democratic fold, who tem porarily aided: in securing them, hafe 0on gone back. The new organization,' naving ta ken for its namethe Americari, party ,". bears fertile Territories, stretching beyond to the Paci&o, capable of sustaining a population of with it the prestige of bur 'dationalitr ' a'nd re one hundred millions, an - rapidly filling up witn tnia class people. " I will advert particularly to one other prin ciple of the American party the "non inter vention of the Federal and State government with the municipal affairs of each other." The strict observance of this principle will make the Union of the States perpetual. -- The . South ia especially and deeply inter ested in tbi&u question this immense -and an nual addition to our population settle in the npn-slatebolding States, and the extensive ter ritories' of the West and North-West, out of which Free States will, in consequence, be more speeduy formed, increasing with fsartal rapid ity the balance of power against us. i M Intimately connected with tbis question of foreign- f m migration,-is the growth of the Ro msn Catholic Church in our country. Deepo tic, proeeriptive and intolfrant. its awendaney, as all hiitory teacnee; "has ever Seen destrue tire of freedom of opinion ; and while. I wpuld uncompromisingly oppose .any interference publican instituuons It baa shown what it can dd, and with proper gUidaaea and- good eanaiaates it wtu Deaiinooit to overcome." Tax Casi or 3 vnok Louso, The reports of the legislative committee in relation to Judge Loring . are. pobiiahed in the Boston papers. The majority report, signed by O. W. Allen, of the Senate, and J. W. Stone,E.E.K:nowle84 and Oliver Warner, of the House, is a long anti slavery argument, and concludes with recom mending -Mr. Loring7 removal from the -office of Judge of Probate for Suffolk county, "be cause he has sinned against the moral senti Lment of . Massachusetts'i-ropt because be has faileiin his diuy in said office. Bradford K Pierce atrd Erasmus Gould declined to sign the 'majority report, because no evidence was put in to show that bis decision at .United States "NEWS OF THE DAY. The NwT)rleins Doljta says :"A gntl maq wishes, to take the following-tets, v 12 : $500 thai the allies do riot capture Sebastopot on or "before the lat of May, 1S55 ; and a like amount that they do not capture it on or before the 1st of June, 1855 ; and a like amount that they-do not capture it in the present year. Bets to be taken altogether." H6n. J. C. Breckenrid'ge deeliaes. making a canvass for Congrens in. the Ashland district, Kentucky. He says he has been aware for more than a year' that it would not be in bis power at present. to make another canvass, but deemed" it decorous to withhold the announce ment 'Until the completion of the term for which he was elected. The San Francisco papers speak of large ar rivals of merchandise there from the East. The wholesale markets have almost all suspen ded business.' The Price- Current has no large sales to report. -There are in fact no wholesale transaction in any article of merchandise, and all attempts to realise wou'd only result in heavy' losses. There is a surplus stock of four, amounting, it is ' reported, to 50,000 barrets above the want for consumption, before next harvest. The amount of wheat on hand is re ported to be 150,000 sacks, equal to 50,000 bar rels of flOKirj and 155,000 barrels of flour, be sides what is in the interior; altogether about 230,000 barrels, while the estimated cousump tion up to next September is 180,000 barrels. Chloroform is . becoming a dangerous aid to crime of all sorts. Robberies by its help are among the most successful and difficult ol detection. At Dunkirk, recently, a Mr. Field, of New York city, went into a barber's shop and took a seat, to get sbavud. He remembers noth ing further, except that when be came to con sciousness he found that he had been robbed of $1,200, and that the barber had fled. Chloro form had been used upon him. The Washington Sentinel refers to Col. Ben ton's recent letter relative to the mail routes across the plains, and says that if the Postmas ter General has done as Col. B. says, a great outrage has been committed by the Post Office Department an outrage which demands a re buke from every Southern man. A letter from Washington states that the dis appointed and twice-vetoed French spoliation claimants do not intend to cease their endeavor?. They will come with increased force upon the next Congress, and in that they expect confi dently to carry the last vetoed bill by a consti tutional majority of two thirds at the next ees aion. ihey aa not propose to go tit lore tu court of claims, as has been suggested, and the court would probably decide tt-ui tiis recent act-, establishing the court does not embrace these claims. It will be observed, however, that the. court is to consider all such case as Congress may refer to it, and they may refer these claims for examination and adjudication. To afford a glimpse at "life in New York," we copy the following advertisement from the New York Herald of the 24th February.: "A ny lady wishing to adopt an infant from its birth (in the early, part of March,) may bear of a good oppor tunity, and have an interview who the mo ther, by addressing E box 187, Herald office." A correspondent of the Richmond Post, wri ting from Accomac, says that Mr. Wise will be beaten two to one in that county. Accomao rarely ever polls over 1600 votes, and the writer says he bas visited seven or eight councils and knows that his party number twelve hundred strong. uwyiJMMnr wnjiViW s coa . l - O A. -I I 1 Qua h.m.w, legiifctiTe- enactment yetl by a full' and den. currying, and heard Brogden reply. hrtdVbendebi m nayner gave mm a very severe reouae ior uui 1 ana tne appointing power imey anouia d m says : " A Senator of the United States, at a dinner t'arty, well said, in reply to an expression of contempt for the President, from a Democratic l.rother Senator : " Gentlemen, I tell you Mr. Pierce has done what no person present could have done he ha almost made the Administra tion of John Tyler respectable by the contrast of his own." . Evidences of Abolition hostility to the Know Nothing movement accumulate upon us from every quarter in the North. We scarce open a single Free Soil paper in which we do not find a letter or a speech from some of the leaders of the Abolition forces, pouring out bit ter exe era tion s upon the Know Nothings, and denouncing them, after the manner of Greeley, " agg' catchers" and " pro-slavery conspirators." The Court of Claims promises to become a tribunal of great importance. The most dis tinguished lawyers of the last Congress are pre paring to locate themselves at Washington for the prosecution of claims before it, and a large num ber of claims are already- in course of prepara tion for trial, including French Spoliation claims, Spanish claims, Ac. Judge Blackford, of Indiana, one of the newly appointed Justices of this Court, has already arrived in Washington. course upon all questions involving the prosper ity of Internal Improvement, and Which' be deserved most richly, and at which most of the Senators were gratified. Brogden, in bis reply, did pretty well, I thought,- but there was noth iqg in his remarks personally offensive none of those low, vulgar and abusi ve epithets, which appear in the published speeoh. It is thought, hereabouts, that Brogden got some one to write ont the speech for him, as it appears in print ; for those who know him say that, with all his torn-foolery, he is not a malignant fellow; and that whoever wrote that -speeoh most fee a bit ter, malignant, vile-hearted enemy of Rayner's. I If this supposition bo true, the writer has done Brogden greatanyustiee ; for the speech deliver ed by him did him no discredit, whilst the one published is calculated to injure him, because it represents him as writhing under Rayner's excoriation, and as endeavoring to. retaliate by coarseness and blackguardism. Brogden's speech, was alt well enough at the time for him. It produced considerable merri ment; Rayner himself laughed as 'heartily at Brogden's buffoonery as' any one present, and rose immediately and said that he tM pleased at the gentleman's reply, and was glad to find he had roused him up, and hoped it would be of service to him for the future. . They say Brogden is a good' fellow enough, in his way. and has generally been considered an moffen sive creature, and "really deserves" some little credit for his efforts' Id" get along in the world, I was informed, when in Raleigh, by many Whigs and Democrats, that his notions of Sen atorial duty consisted i maturing plans to thwart the purposes of able and liberal minded members, whom he calls the " proud aristocrats" jf the country ; and that his chief occupation. when not actively engaged Upon the yea and nays, was pasting in a scrap book, which is his oonstant companion, lines from Pope, Hudv bras, Sbakgpenrt, atd poetry from New8pa ners and then rolling them no? on every occa sion, when be replies to other members, no mat- ter on wnai suiJjecs. s I was also informed that the poor fellow is much alarmed about tho Know Nothings,' ' Some wag has told him that these Mysterious people sometimes eatoh folks and compel them to drink a spoonful of the blood of a foreigner, and hence with the rights of its members, as citizens, J&y 1 Commissioner in the slave case was corrupt ; lUif " l lMMIIufiriiil lif HitfUlrf in fawnr Af thA klav no complaint .would hive been: made, against jiunr j "and-became they will not "make one man a sacrifice-tor the sins of others, even for the benefit Of a i good oatise," ' Their reasons are followed by a minority report, signed by George H. J)evereux, which goes against the removal of Air. Lprin as as arbitrary exercise of power dangerous to the independence of the judiciary, ahd neither just nor magnanimous on the part of the States which, if prepared to rVsiet the au thority of thje Union, ought to do it in her sove reign' capacity, instead of offering up a single citisen as avictini to anti-slavery rage and fan- atidsw.-,- m-..'- daded from' the, offices, of the Government in all its departments. ' ' ' . ' ? I shall not tiave it in. my power to "meet the people of the State and discuss these questions with thenr face to face It is now about sixty days to the election, and4 if I were to detote every day to the canvass I should 'not be able to visit much more than one-third of the ebdnties. An additional,'' and with me- an impOrlanf rea son, is, that 1 shall be fully occupied m prepa ration Tor and attendance upon' the Courts' in which I practioe, until the election shaJl have pasaea. "It, with tbese opinions anq. tms position, tho. people of Virginia shall elect me to the dis tinguished otace ot Governor ot tne uomon W6alth, J will discharge it duties with fidelity and what ability V possess'. ' I will endeavor to advance the prosperity, guard? th honor and protect the interests and institutions of Virgin ia, by all jthe power vested in me, and Jl snail do all that I can, consistent with her interest and honor, for the preservation of the Union-. ' Very respectfully, your Obedient serv't, Thomas S. FloVskoy. : A Ccbiocs MissioN.rrrMr. Soule, in one of hie letters to the State Department, makes some singular disclosures. He says' that Louis Na poleon, before his celebrated coup d'etat,' which placed him at the bead of. an ompirehad 00c ooeted with General Narvaea, the Spanish win isier, the plan of a mission to the United States, to sound bow far this country was ; vulnerable in a, military ; point . of view JL': seoret agent was to be eent with instructions prepared by the Department of Foreign Affairs. These in structions, duly signed, were presented to Napo leon' Bonaparte, the son of Jerome, with a ten der of what amount of money he. might require to carry them ont. The-Iatter refused," telling Louis' Napoleon that he was bet the man for " a '"a -w ' 'f ' " " - - ' suoh. a worn; that pe waa republican, ana would rather be with the United State than with him. 1 The matter was dropped, and"-' has not been resumed sihee, t least to' theknwwl edge of Mr. Soule's informant. ""Soule nimr self appears to.bave full faith in the statement -"IQP Th'eBdjournment of the Indiana Legis lature bas left things in a worse plight than people outside of the State were at first aware of. r It Seems that they did not re-apportion the tate tor representation, ana mat tne present apportionment will expire before the meeting of another session. If the Governor does not call an extra session, there will thus be no legal rule of representation to govern the next elec tion, the.Uovernor. .having no. authority to pro -vide one.; Oh the whole, it h uat be evident that the' course Of the Democratic minority, in forr cingan adjrnmentsiV die, was purely revolu tionary in ctbaraeter, and . entirely antagoniati oal. to the principle- upon which our State and national'eon8titdtions are based the right of the .majority to govern." , '3 Ex-Minister Sonle will set out for home, via Havana and Now Orleans, probably in the Ca hawba, to sail thin week. What will the Cap tain General do about it ? -The Supreme Court of Texas has decided that slave can be Islly emancipated in that State, by wiU.or otherwise, u they are sent out of its limits. : ; n. the aetdement of the Black Warrior affair with &e Spanish -government, Spain admits that the nWeonformity of the manifest of the steamer witn the law Was the fault of the Cuban MrBRtcatiPflB,of tho Ashland (Ky,) f Bait6nl Suee" olRcers I tSiat time should have District, retires from the field candidate for re-election.' 'The before going home to Kentucky in Congress, whereupon ,SamiiplJowe4 Jiim.l -i mJgeondncL: Th'is'vmust be considered a n&Mr. B. didn'$ lik his I00W:-; 3niibl very satisfaiCtoty aejttlemejhutar'M the Ueij Correspondence of the New York Herald Rivas, Niabagca, March 6, 1855. Is Colonel Wheeler a Filibusterof Marriages at the Uaited State Legation Indignation of the People of Qranada. .. When will the administration cease to send abroad ministers who have not the capacity for their missions, and who are not capable 'of maintaining the dignity of the country? ' Tbey nave sent a gentleman to rsicarragun who, from thft very first moment he arrived here, bRS shown himself to bff a' filibuster, and something more. Ilia first official act was to marry two couple, a Svriss to a native, and an American nrgro to a native. This was done before it u hardly knfwri by either party that he "was in the country, 'and'' bt what" au thority he afted ho one knows but himself.' liis next was to attach to his legation some four or five entlemen frcm-New-Orleans.,' who had nothing to loe and ail to gain, and wtio.'" to further their purposes, found a verv 'useful' man (so it is said) in Col. J. II. Wheeler,' the minister. They went with him to Grana da, and were introduced to Gen. Chomorrd'as' members of the legation. There three of them went over to the Castilloa party, and received commissions as colonels and captain, with an order to intercept a bungo that was to leave San Juan del Norte on a certain day w:th mu nitions Of war for Chorttorro,. for which pur pose tbey received $500 to efllist men and buy arms. The people of the country are very indignant They cannot see what ever induced the Presi dent to send such a minister to represent the United State?, The war is still pending; and if Chomorrd gains, which i moat probable, Colonel Wheelef will no? be rtccived, tor the people are very mucit iROfiiwu sgaiust nun. - iud uuy uv tvr rived there wa found a bundle of so.ne halt doaen or more rifles, which he denie any knowlcdgn of s-etill, they were marked in his name. This has gone over the whole country, and they look upon him as ei Ministro fiiibus tero. . - '. . - - - - . ... The following is tLe translation of -a letter that was written by the Governor of the south ern department to the Minister of Relations of the provisional government : " 1 lue prestige of a bmuant scheme will not only fascinate small minds, as my. awn, but also great ones, now and then. In one of these moments of pleasant illusions I have made an agreement with the two principal -chiefs of a small party of filibusters, by winch thwy un dertake to conquer the- Castillo and Fort San uarios, pacing 'Dotn -'points aitcrwsras at. -tne disposition of the democratic government,-' ' New YoSiMatctfW here this motning aftO i'tefyrstnm'y andm pes tuous passage of seveteetf days " - Tb Atlantic arrived ! out Sn'the ' afternoon f the4th int., and leff Litetpliof at 2:oclocr, P. M. on the lOtb.'" She 'experienced severe westerly gales doringtbe eritire passagevr1 She arrived off the Light House about midnighb8 did not come dp till this morning' '.;! ' "' 'f : DEATH.OF TIIE CZAR. V - The death of Nicholas; the Car,.is confirmed. He expired shortly after noon 00 Friday, the second of March. His disease , was atrophy ef the lungs. Ha was sick only a few -.day a His last words to the -Em press were, tell Frederick the King of Prussia, to continue hia attachment ' to Russia as he has hitherto done and never forget bis father's words. .It is said: that a few 1 lays before his deaths thfr- Cxat. succeeded in ffiectjn a eonrplete eejanoiliariaabetwaen bis two eldest son v Alexander and. the Daka Con-, stan tine, who were at variance. . . ah The news of tho Emperor's datb was receiv ed in England with great demonstrations of joy. A t several. theatres, lbs Managers came before the curtain and announced the fact, whiob was received with the most tumultuous, and long.contisuedcheering ,; ... -t.-j v,; -ipR0SSU - '--; .! The Berlin court has placed itself in mournr ing, 'and issued orders fyrJthjP,. whole Prussian ; army to wear symbol nj. nxburnipg for four weeks. ., -t '. '. -: : :.AusTftiAtr;: ;;;:: At Vienna the news caused great agimtiont Orders were immediateiy issued by the Emperor of Austria, directing an acknowledgment of th.S services, rendered by Nicholai during tba tiam of unfortunate trials with Hungary, Jbc The Nicholas Regiment of . Cuirasseurs are always to preserve that name as a Souvenir in the AuV tnan army. -, , , -; , -.7. ; FRANCE,-: .-. -. The Paris Police had arrested several ballad singers forhauating verses disrespectful to the aeaa czar. Y - - T ALEXANDER, HE NEW EMPElUjR. J The ambassadors of. different countries had' announced the new Emperor's aooesstoo to top throne. . -t .- - , Alexander had issued a manifesto, a synopr , sis of which is published in the Londn papers. Jt canie by way of Koningsburg, ,and declares t te weltare ot bis ximpire to be tne only object 1 of his life. He will endeavor to maintain Rub si a on the highest standard pf power and glory;; and will aim incessantly to accomplish tne wishesand views of his predecessors. . He hopes the zeal and enegy of his subjects will be exetf cised to asiit him therein. . . . His succession . to the Russian , throne waa peaceableaod quiet. , He declares in bis mani festo that he will adherarigidly to the jina , of policy marked out by bis deceased father , . w Constantino and other brothers, and. ail the officers, have taken the paths of allegiance to Alexander. . . w. 0 ". The nevf Emperor hasoonfirmed the previous dipfomatio instructions to Gortachakoff..tOJio- gotiate and. adjust preliminary arrangements tor tne Uoaiecenco to be- noid at V ienna i9 N icholas had reoalled MenschikoffaBdappein ted Gan. Gortsobakoff the -Chief ia rammgnil Ostnsaohen second, and Ludera to Bessarabl. : Alexander has appointed Gen.Rudiger as Jiimster ot war. d The, Allies hare ordered their armies tp, press forward the war with renewed energy. -U FROM THE" CRIMEA. , ' ; There had been m.dre fighting intbe Ctrikjea. The French had stormed a redoubt which had been skilfully erected by the' Russians during the" night. It is said that several Kun&redwore killed". A strong rbm'or prevailed that, the Grand Duke Michael was . Wounied and 'died frbm its.effa'ct at'Sebastp ' ' ' 'c Zl A large force of Russians threatened Balac lava and ablockade of the Danube was expected. Broussa has peen destroyed, with the most of its inhabitants,"by an earthquake, " , DIFFICULTY1 BETWEEN FRANCE AND V ENGLAND.' ooat&ins all thm rVa.vra.iiAA f rWrf Ituir a oonojDja?itfor sadjriU p ftaad very asvroi for removing the languor occasioned by crowded rooms, -ov? Also,' as a delicious perfume for the hanoeheraad will bo found much cheap w Jgraoai ;eqnaU7 good, and a peasant ehango-for the;Eu de Cologne. - Alsoi Glenn's MuakToilet Water, aiean'sCitro nella Water, Glenn's Boss Geranium Water For Sale in Batelgb by P. F". PjS3CUI Druggist aad Chemist. , , ' , UPpITTa SPOlFIC. .- roa. th cea of ; .. . Dysentery, Diarrhoea, and Summer Complaint, I N presenting this jusd celebrated Medicine to I - to puotio, wt? mak no rash assertions of iu SoacyyMciis.atiy aope fael'4 out tothla afflbud, wmcu ir? nof'Wrrant. -- This winWy having betjn, tor years, used in this place, for thfcouxe of tiki. above diseaMs, and thoa appertaining tothe saraa class, ti Proprietor ha boea bdueed to olfar it on a more extensive iciIa. With . view? to lessen th amount of human sotfex i.ng."' I have'nevor". knoVvn:it to fail, when tho Ui- ' Many'usble'ss nostrums have been palmed upon the-public, and I hesitated for some time, uatil thoroughly coavineod of iu etficaey. Eiwacj of atter wiirei. Jrpcn S. J. Cauoll t ' ' ' ' BALTiMoai; Jan. 10th, 1853. . .. WH,. Lu-yixr,, Esq., Dear Six i I have no hesitation in.sayiog that your Specific is one of the Dst Medicines extant for Dysentery, Diarraosa, Itc. You" possibly may recollect my case; if it has es caped your memory, I will give you briefly the facts. 1 had tried everything that I had seen used, but Withittttle success.' And aAer Using enough to start twety-fiv' Hompopathic M. D's., 1 begaa to i9paizi, when you kindly icrtfered me your ia valua ble Madicino, which cured tne effectually. -, Yws,trjuy, -. , ,, j S. ). CARROLL. , ., a WrLMiMOroN.JI.a, Aagii, 1853. WMHLhrm; Esq-.Demr iir: I have used you' specifie ia two eases in iy fatally for Dysen tery. . la one, a spooafui aaWtpd a oaptew . ia th oQir thrp bad the liks aot. ,.,j&pectfuUy; fcc.,. THO LO&INQ, . 1 . . Ed. Commercial. , J. . HABRELL'S STORE, Niw jrUitpvxa Co., N. C;, Oct 10, IS54. , Wm; H.IVrrrr,Eq., -War Sir t It is with pUs sure I state that X have' Osd ydur Specific for tha cure of Dysentery, Diarrhosa, lte. and have found it to produce the desired effdet "in every case I used it, after the Usual remediee have failed. I recommend-it With TCnfldaee to the public. ' EespeetfuUy, Jtc., ,-- . J, B. SAVEr, M. D. ' SavaJTrah, Ga., Dec. 26, 1551. Ma. Wit. H. LrrritT, Dear Sir : It is with plea sure L acknowledge the Vonderfui effects of your Medicine for curing Diarrhoea or Bowel Complaint, as I ant satisfied it" wasnhe means, under God, ot aViog :tb life, first of aay child, and then of mr brother. . As my brother was given up by two of the most eminent physicians: in. this place, Drs. Richardsoa aad Wregg ; and when I eonsulted the lattr,4a to he propriety of. uying it on Him so low, lia said I taugbt, to aUsfy myself that 1 awl teA nothing umrjad, but he did not think that me4 iciop would be of any use to him. But, thank God, he wamlstakea, as we saw the salutary effects in ,4 hour, and in ten days he was able to be oat of bed. 4- . . I remain yours, very truly and gratefully, . WM, BALLY, Prepared and sold by. WM. H. LIPPiyT, Wilmingtoa, C. . For sale by WILLIAMS HAYWOOD, aad P. F. PESCTJD, Raleigh, N. ,C. ; For sola by W. H. MOORE, Goldsbeco. N. C. i ..- . , '. ,. . 'u -'-uMaMaBaauBPaaMaHMMBaaaapaBMBaBaMBaaaka A an"ck of disagreement ban a.riaan hAturosn France andEngland. Napoleon said the ar mies sliould not arm together, if Roebuck's oqm- mi ttee proceeaeav . yUorq lar.enaop, went by ex prjessjto.Boulogne an'dmade roat;s straiglit. In. the mean tiuie the Committee his pcooVld, 1.... : . r Ai u . TlJI: ! Jit. - fi 1 : - , , uui iv is tuc.ugu fanwuD( wii,op UfSMMl. . Difficulties are serious ui"Sw.(zrjand.andbe Belgian crisis boPtinue'd The" King of Den mark is feiclu:' .' .-' , v.l ,....' - a- . ; markets:" ; . f Bro wn &, Shipley -reports -that cotton begun' the week Motive,- but feJJ. offhand closed tama at barely an eighth, advancec4 At. Manchester it Mas better. .-.:. . . . t. v - '-- , Breadstuff were dullat.-2d.- decline ; Wheat declined Is.; Flour a shilling and Corn deelin-M ed filigntly.- . tseanng reports tbat . London business Was fair. Iron quiet. American stocks quiet and unchanged. - Money-easier. -Consols 93. . Bounty Iiand' Aenoy. TtlHE andarBigned, Notaries Public and Genarai X Agentpybaviag had several yeacaaxperieaoe la the proseoanoa ol iiouuty land and PenaiOa claims, offers Jaeu- services to obtain Laad War rants under the act of Congress which gives 180 acres of land to all Officers, Musicians, Privates, leamsters, vnapi&ias, seamen, iuarines, Clerks Ac.; who have serrti in amy 0 the wars since 17 90 (who have not' received their warrants. - SA:J 3TELTLNNIUS Sc. CO. Wnsaingtoa City, Mrch 1S35. lm.' Sale of. Heal Estate t -.ILL Bt; BOLD; on the first Monday, in .April next, at-Public outcry. Lot No. 16. in the City of JUleia. .Said Lot is bounded a the North by Hillsboro' street, South by Morgan street, East by flarringtoh Street, and West by VVeit Street. , Said Lot ia- 210 feet.square, (ct taining one acre,) and is situated ia aa excelieut nefghborhood, and in a most desirable seotion of the City. "'. Terms made known on day of sale. . .-V:'.. ' HENRY D. KENNEDY ? - - , of Columbia, Teon. March 28; 1865. - . 24 td. B P ar is--1 x Febr 0 a rt. A letter from Paris; da ted the 223 ef February, states that the city at that' time presented more Arctic aspect (ban it had worn before during the winter. . There had been a heavy fall of snow, and hosts of city workmen and private laborers were engaged in clearing the obstruction from the streets-and railway lines. I n the country near Paris many persons had been caught in the storm and per ished in the snow. Tne wolves came forth from their forest haunts,1 and carried off every thing in the shape of sheep or poultry Which they could find. " Yet, notwithstanding' the severity of the season, the Parisians" bad abandoned themselves to merriment and gayety, and but few nights . previous the official returns bad shown that four4i'undred,an4eigJbtyvcn balls were held; in Paris and ita suburbs jut single evening. i ; f.s-rr . ' -. r; t-:..--? s..;. The last ball ai the Botel de Ville was per feci jam". Ten thousand persons were present. American ladies,' wb'd' weTe'pres'eht' there,-spent two hours in their carriages, before eriteriOg, an bout aid a half on'the strairway while wait- ing for an opportunity to depart, -and reached :tfaeir bomes about seven o'clock in the moraine' -Towards the close of the balL manv French Ur I dies were compelled by fatigue to aeat tbemsfl- ALMOF THOUSAND FLOWERS For beautifying the ' Complexion anl eradicating aU Taji, Pimplbs, and Fpkcxlks from the face. . ROMAN, EALYDOR, for-Freckles, Tan, Han bara,. Motk or . Morphew, Ac. This preparation, like several of the proprietor's articles, has bea a long urns neiors te puilic, and well maintaias iU dooervedJ popularity, It is equal to aay pre- para.uoa oiiiuBwiaiB ase; jor aiscoloration 01 the skin it Jiaa been atooh ia vorue and sut ba used on the mostdeUoats skin without injury. 'tom utnn aITTu vnviivm una it . pleter remedy for. Freckles, Discoloration of the Skin, Sunburn, This preparation has had as mucn popularity as. aay article eTer offered for the purpose, and it eaa.W confidently reconunpaded. w.nrvuflu -vAnrttyn bkjxt, for prevent ing: and curing the ' bite ' of mosouitoap. pimples, ftel', For safe by"' The twohiefs spoken of were in Granada f ves on the Soot in their magtificsntr dresses, attached to Colonel Wheeler! lega anoifot a few .wept trom vexation. . t,r : with and tion. These- proceedings have aroused the in dignation of the people. ' . Large sale 6f negroes. The sale of Major Nat. Green's negroes took place in Warrenton last week, and higher 'prices Wr paia lor iae negroes tuu pt jy preceaing ale we ever heard of. Sixty-nine were sold at an average of "more Jthan seven .hundred dollars, a piece,', and among: the huthber, were some thirty odd cbUdren,' ' Whatever, may be the character of the1 times elsewhere, there eertainiy ' can be no eo-anlaiat of tke scarcity of money in ' and about Wacxan county, Hotta" CacoliaaJPto-so-it. I 'Raleigh,' March 185& 26. G&ICUtTCEAL f NbTICE-The Members jof the "'Executive Committee of the North Uaxvlimr-sute Agrieultttral 'Socttty are hereby roqucttkeu w weei uj uiiy I italeigh, on MoadayltlM 2d darf April fof the purpose of anaagingacUstpf-euump to bo offered at tne; acxb annual cxhtMuon m October, and also to adopt an. Orgaa" for said Society to publish j)rocediiig, A.C., under the authority of re- tauonipassea i a special seasioa ia Juhujuj ... 1 of lb Greensville raikoad ,os iL aBird, Ths following gentlemen coupose the commit teeMesers; Wsb A' atoev Ueb't A. Baiailtoa, Grmvill; IX.McDaniel, Nash 1 Thoa, D. Mearoi, BiuMwic, McRae, New Hanover, W, W.WhiUlter. W. fl. Joaes, W. R. Poole, iaa. Taylor Jno. C. Partridge, Needham rdee, W. 1 Land Waexants are in good detaahd in New York, and worth 1 160 to lo5 naru In nrnm,. tion. bea the new ones ar nisudnnder th?l Aoas, f'J'" act or tneiare congress it'is prooanie tnei price will decline somewbai "Ther-Will,rf however be no eu-jply fromtbis source Ter some timrF- .-.v ?QZ? S!"'J 'i Hiaysr- .ttitL t,' 4Afi i u ill xs.-r-The, South Sid JDemoAret 1 learn, that J as., M. JCulloeb b boen o: poinveu. uy iub . u-rocwrs temporary rresidea t Hfaren 27, 1865: IDW'D i. CRUDTJP Ch'm. Us. 'Commhte. ' ' ' td TV7-1 CCTEBJU3GS barrel, v Xol JJ North CUiia. Cut Herrings. Just received from the Fiaheries tot sale ky . SmiMSSt WHITE. rilLK eadoj-straw'Bottnsts asdlafaats'-Hata O' 11?-. 1.4 'flv-mapy
The Weekly Raleigh Register (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 4, 1855, edition 1
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